“We all share the same sky”

So says Babak Tafreshi, the photographer and amateur astronomer from Iran.   Tafreshi was hooked on stargazing the first time he looked through a telescope and saw the moon.  Inspired by Carl Sagan, he founded the World at Night project and posts photos of the night sky behind famous landmarks around the world on his website.

Last week I was talking on the telephone with my dad, who lives four hundred miles away.  I asked if he had seen the full moon and then told him to check out the very bright star next to it–not really a star, but the planet Jupiter.  His view of the pair was over a quiet Denver suburb, mine above  a scattering of houses in the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.

In January, and throughout the winter, the most prominent constellation is Orion; the  three bright stars that make up the mythological character’s belt are easy to spot in the southeastern sky.  When I travel this time of year,  I always look overhead and once I locate the great hunter, sword at his side, I feel oriented, at home in the world.

Cow Birds Around the World

Photo Credit:  K. Nixon

Photo Credit: K. Nixon

In response to my post about the egrets I saw from the train window in New Jersey, my sister-in-law, Kelli, wrote to me about the egrets in her neighborhood in the Dominican Republic. When she mentioned that they hang out with the cows and horses, I knew exactly the bird she was talking about.  The first time I remember seeing one was on a family vacation to Louisiana.  We usually headed west to the Rockies so much was new to us on our road trip from Kansas to New Orleans.  Bullfrogs croaked through the night and each bovine had a bird or two hanging out at its side.

The cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis) is native to Africa, but somehow made its way, first, to South America in the 1940s and, then, north to the Caribbean Islands and the United States, where it is now common.  They trail livestock and tractors looking for the insects that get stirred up by the movement.

Smaller and stockier, they are not as elegant as the snowy or great egret (both native to North America), but are entertaining to watch bobbing along beside, or sitting on top of their hosts.

In other languages, as in English, they are generally identified by the company they keep:  cow cranes, elephant birds, rhinoceros egrets.

 Photo Credit: dorgel1 via Compfight cc

Photo Credit: dorgel1 via Compfight cc

 

 

 

 

Elvis and Nature?

When I started this blog I thought I could cover most things I was interested in writing about under the big umbrella of “nature”.  It turns out Elvis’ birthday is a bit of a challenge.

Photo Credit: Thomas Hawk via Compfight cc

Photo Credit: Thomas Hawk via Compfight cc

The infamous jungle room at Graceland was the first thing that came to mind, but animal-print upholstery, green wall-to-ceiling shag carpet, and exotic plants aren’t really the kind of nature I had in mind.

The best I could come up with was this tidbit about Graceland.  Elvis’ parents, Gladys and Vernon, both from rural Mississippi,  moved into the white-columned mansion with him in 1957.  While he was busy redecorating the interior, they planted a vegetable garden and built a chicken coop in the backyard.

Photo Credit: johnb/Derbys/UK. via Compfight cc

Photo Credit: johnb/Derbys/UK. via Compfight cc

I can just picture the two of them sitting in their lawn chairs, chickens pecking at their feet while the King of Rock-n-Roll  is selecting just the right fabric for ceiling of the billiard room.

Happy Birthday, Elvis!

Hawaii: The Kiawe Tree

 Photo Credit: Rosa Say via Compfight cc

Photo Credit: Rosa Say via Compfight cc

Kiawe trees (Prosopis pallida) like this one on A-Bay Beach are a species of mesquite native to Ecuador and Peru.  Introduced to Hawaii in the 1800s they thrive on the hot and dry, leeward (western and southern) coasts of the islands. I hadn’t been able to identify a similar tree behind the beach until Charlotte filled me in on its name with this note, “very common here in Hawaii with sharp thorns that stick thru your slipper.”

This one is huge; its sprawling and twisted limbs provide shelter and a multitude of perches for the cats.

By P. Nixon

By P. Nixon

A few miles up the road bees pollinate a forest of kiawe trees and produce a white honey that is said to have a “delicate tropical flavor“.  Dave purchased a jar to bring home not knowing it was related to the beach trees.  We were looking forward to trying it on our morning toast along with a cup of Kona coffee, but the sweet paste didn’t pass the scrutiny of airport security and with no time to go back out to the counter to check it, it was confiscated.  Next time . . .

Happy New Year!

Thank you for reading my blog.  I have now written about thirty posts and appreciate your patience with my typos and technical glitches.

I am always glad to receive input and have heard from a few of you in the last couple of weeks.  Charlotte found out the name of the tree that shelters the A-Bay cats.  Robin shared an article about an unexpected and not-so-pleasant visitor to the High Line.  Kelli sent a picture of the egrets that are in her neighborhood in the Dominican Republic.

I’ll be doing followup posts on each in January and look forward to hearing from you in the new year!

 Photo Credit: DD. Photography via Compfight cc

Photo Credit: DD. Photography via Compfight cc

Books for the New Year

Skateboards and comic books appeared to have taken over Hastings when I stopped in during the holiday season. I’ve spent the last two years trying to weed out my bloated library giving box loads of books away, so it had been months since I last stopped in my local mall bookstore.

It took some hunting, but eventually I found what I was looking for–the nature and animal sections. Side-by-side, they had been moved since my last visit and, surprisingly, expanded. I perused the mix of new and used books for a half an hour trying to narrow my selection to a reasonable number.

By P. Nixon

By P. Nixon

The four I finally decided on should keep me going through the next few weeks of short, cold days. Now I just have to find a spot for them on one of my crowded bookshelves.

The Un-White Christmas

Photo Credit: Pétur Gauti via Compfight cc

Photo Credit: Pétur Gauti via Compfight cc

No white Christmas for New Mexico this year.  According to a story I heard on KUNM  that’s not uncommon–it happens about once every sixteen years for Albuquerque.  Santa Fe with its proximity to the mountains is more likely to have snow, but not this year.

On Christmas afternoon it was sunny and forty degrees, perfect for a walk.  Dave and I met our friend David and his golden retriever at a trail head west of Santa Fe,   There were remnants of an earlier snow for Seamus to roll in, but the trail was dry.

It reminded me of the many Christmases I spent as a kid in Liberal, Kansas.  We always hoped for snow, but it rarely happened.  Somewhere, I have a photo taken out on our driveway on one of those Christmas days.  My sister, eight- or nine-years-old , dressed in plaid wool pants and a heavy sweater is just about to find her balance on a new pair of stilts, not a snowflake in sight.

I checked the weather in Liberal when we got home from our walk–clear and forty-seven degrees.  I like to think there were a few kids out on Fairview Street playing with new toys.

Winter Walk – Centennial, CO

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It’s a rare day that I am the first person to put my footprints on a path frequented by dog walkers and joggers, but it happened this morning.

Dave and I arrived in Denver last night and woke to a light dusting of snow. The temperature was a chilly twenty degrees, but the sun was shining brightly compelling me to take a walk along the dry Willow Creek while Dave did his jobsite review.

Overhead a flock of Canada geese was flying south in formation and I noticed small paw prints on the trail.  I wasn’t the first creature out and about after all.

Winter Solstice – December 21, 2013

First night of winter:  it’s cold and dark, clouds obscuring the waning moon, but the snow flurries have stopped.  Somewhere in the southern sky is the hunter, Orion, with Sirius, the Dog Star, at his heels. 

It won’t be noticeable, but tomorrow there will be a  few more seconds of daylight as winter begins to give way to spring.

Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening
by Robert Frost

Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
And miles to go before I sleep.


					

Hawaii: Crouching Heron, Basking Turtle

To get a glimpse of what the Kohala Coast might have looked like before man arrived with his myna birds and monkey pod trees, Dave and I walked towards the sea (makai, in Hawaiian) along the coastal access between the Hilton Hotel and A-Bay Beach.

The sun was getting low in the sky, but we paused to admire the anchialine ponds surrounded by jagged black lava rock and emerald green shrubs and grasses.  A black-crowned  night-heron (Nycticorax nycticorax hoactili) crouched, perfectly still, over the smooth surface of the brackish pool intent on the tiny shrimp swimming there.  Similar to his cousin on the Mainland, this night-heron is indigenous to Hawaii, which means that unlike the house sparrows and saffron finches flitting around the shopping centers and golf courses, he came to the Islands on his own, without any assistance from humans.

Photo Credit:  P. Nixon

Photo Credit: P. Nixon

At the beach, a mix of small, sharp-edged lava rocks and smooth white coral, we found two large slabs of lava and settled in to watch the setting sun,  partially obscured by vog from Kilauea Volcano erupting further south on the island.

Dave noticed him first.  A Hawaiian green turtle (Chelonia mydas) just a few feet away from us was lumbering across the rocky beach.  After a few hours basking in the sun he was making his way back to the algae beds.

Photo Credit:  Dave Betzler

Photo Credit: Dave Betzler

We turned away from the sunset to watch him inch closer and closer to the water.  And then he was gone, into the waves, taking millions of years of secrets with him.